>My husband has a skin fungus that comes and goes on his thighs,
>buttocks, and groin area.
>The doctors keep giving him ketozonazole 2% or lamisil with
>really no help of relief. It grows very fast and is red around the
>edges and sort of a yellowish tan inside of the red odd shapes of
>all kinds. It does not really itch or burn. It is just there. He also,
>has a history of eye stys, cold sores, ear aches, and stuffed up
>sinuses, amongst many other things. Could any of that be related
>to the rash? Do you think that ither of your fungus killers would
>help him in any way?



I'm assuming it's indeed a fungal rash, as it is in a warm and moist area and it also fits the description of a fungal rash, coming and going, being red etc.

Fungal skin rashes quickly get permanently resistant against antifungal skin creams and antifungals in general. Perhaps those creams worked well for the first month or so?

Not all fungi have enough Chitin in their cell wall for Lufenuron to be able to affect them much. Sometimes a higher dose is required, or it doesn't work at all. Since we don't know which fungus your husband is coping with, there is nothing we can say about how effective Lufenuron could be for him.

The only thing you can do is simply try. It can't do harm, as Lufenuron is not eliminated by the liver or kidneys but simply excreted through the feces. We only sell it as a "Candida cure" (well, "treatment" would be more accurate as by far not everyone gets cured permanently - it depends on diet and immune status as well) but we have had several people with mysterious rashes that experienced spectacular improvement, one of which is this gentleman with a (fungal?) rash on his foot of which he was told it was a form of psoriasis. I want to stress again that Lufenuron is no miracle drug and fungi get resistant to it just as they get resistant to Lamisil, Diflucan etc. All we can do is make available a novel antifungal medicine that is both relatively cheap and safe, and it works in another way than the other antifungals, so resistance does not exist in the wild yet. We see excellent results with Lufenuron in people who have visible signs of fungal infection such as rashes, sores and visible yeast. People with "vague" complaints such as dizziness, headaches, bloatedness etc. report less good results. We think this is because they suffer from other ailments such as gluten sensitivity, Crohns or neurological problems due to for example Lyme disease etc.

When a person copes with a persistent Candida infection such as a rash somewhere, we nearly always see Candida infecting other parts of the body as well. Medical science does not know exactly why but it seems to be a problem with the immune system. It is known that Candida has ways to "shut down" the part of the immune system that attacks it. When John (my husband) battled with Candida, he had it everywhere. Sores in his mouth (in the cheeks), painful gums, sores on his foreskin, dry, irritated eyes, irritated upper airways, itchy "nether region" etc. All warm and moist areas can become affected, even if you have a deep belly button!